Michael Gallardo
readily admits he was reluctant, at first, to serve as president of the Log
Cabin Republicans' San Francisco chapter. But having now led the conservative
LGBT political group for six months, he has settled into the role.

"It was not a position I sought. My arm was twisted by
some gentlemen who were very convincing," said Gallardo, 61, during a
recent interview with the Bay Area Reporter. "I think I kind of have grown
into the position."

When he agreed last fall to serve as vice president of the
chapter, Gallardo wasn't looking to someday become the public face of the
group. He was thrust into the president position due to the sudden resignation
in February of his predecessor, Troy Bodnar, who had been elected to serve a full one-year term last October.

But Bodnar, a registered nurse, lost his job in the Bay Area
and ended up taking a six-month contract position in Honolulu. Not only did he
step down from his Log Cabin position, Bodnar also resigned from his elected
seat on the local Republican County Central Committee and quit the Republican
Party altogether. He cited President Donald Trump's positions on health care and immigration for his decision, as the
B.A.R. reported in its online Political Notes column at the time.

Although Gallardo favored Texas Senator Ted Cruz
during the Republican presidential primary race
last year, he told the B.A.R. he has supported Trump ever since he secured the
GOP nomination last July and continues to do so. He said he isn't concerned
about the president's use of Twitter or constant haranguing of the mainstream
media as "fake news."

"I think he speaks the vernacular of the American
people," said Gallardo. "His message doesn't have to be filtered by
anyone."

While LGBT advocates dinged Trump for not issuing a Pride Month
proclamation, Gallardo noted that both the defense and state departments held
Pride events during June.

"I am not sure I would say I am disappointed. He has a
lot on his plate. I would have hoped he would issue something," said
Gallardo, adding that, overall, "I think Trump is on the right
course."

Living in one of the most liberal cities in America,
Gallardo often refrains from expressing his own political views in public. In
fact, he voiced some reticence about being profiled as president of the Log
Cabin chapter.

"I don't go out of my to way court controversy. I am
very careful with whom I discuss politics," said Gallardo. "I have a
lot of liberal friends and we agree to disagree and move on from there."

His partner, Jose
Cardoza, as it turns out, is a registered
Democrat who backed Hillary Clinton in
the November election. With how heated last year's election became, the couple
opted not to display any campaign signs on their Alamo Square home.

"He is definitely CNN, I am definitely Fox," said
Gallardo, who has worked in various retail positions but this spring starting
driving for Lyft.

Born in San Francisco, the oldest of four children, Gallardo
grew up in Yreka, California, a small town near the Oregon border that is
class=st>the Siskiyou County seat. His grandparents owned a local
restaurant in town, and his father, who was in the Marine Corps, decided to
relocate the family there.

"I was the first Republican in my family. In high
school I volunteered for Richard Nixon," recalled Gallardo, who returned
to San Francisco in 1976 to attend San Francisco State University and never
left.

Forty years ago this August, Gallardo joined the group Concerned
Republicans for Individual Rights, which was launched by San Francisco
Republicans, both gay and straight, as a way to fight against a proposed policy
that would have banned LGBT people, as well as their straight allies, from
working in the state's public school districts. Known as the Briggs initiative,
the ballot measure was defeated in November 1978.

Gallardo credited former governor Ronald Reagan's decision
to publicly oppose the homophobic measure with helping to sway public opinion
against it.

"Because of Reagan coming out in opposition to it, it
went down to defeat," he said.

Nearly a decade later, in August 1987, CRIR rebranded itself
as the Log Cabin Club of San Francisco/CRIR. In October of that year, the local
group helped launch a national umbrella organization with other Log Cabin
chapters from within California and in other states.

In the 1980s the San Francisco chapter had 250 members,
recalled Gallardo. But it saw its membership decline after former Governor Pete
Wilson in October 1991 vetoed Assembly
Bill 101, which would have banned anti-gay job discrimination in the Golden
State.

Wilson's decision incensed many within the LGBT community
who saw it as a betrayal. According to the Los Angeles Times, the Republican
had reportedly pledged to support the legislation in meetings with gay
activists during his gubernatorial campaign against former San Francisco mayor Dianne
Feinstein.

"It upset a lot of people, and many gay Republicans
said, "That does it. I am through," said Gallardo.

Today, the local Log Cabin chapter has close to 50 members. As
chapter president, Gallardo would like to grow the group's membership and
further its participation with other Republican clubs.

"My main goal is to maintain the integrity of Log Cabin
Republicans," he said.

Should he be elected to a full term as president this
October, Gallardo will help marshal the chapter members to work on the 2018
re-election campaigns of Assemblywoman Catharine Baker
(R-Dublin), the Bay Area's lone
Republican legislative member, and state Senator Andy Vidak
(R-Hanford) in the Central Valley.

"We are a volunteer organization and provide a lot of
shoe leather," said Gallardo, noting that club members in 2014 helped re-elect
Vidak to his 16th Senate District seat, which he had won the previous year in a
special election to fill a vacancy. "He accepted and appreciated the
support of Log Cabin."

It has been three years since San Francisco's last
Republican elected official, James Fang,
lost his seat on the BART board of directors. Party members are working to
regain some local political power at the ballot box but acknowledge it could
take some time.

"I fully expect to have another Republican elected to
office in the next four years," pledged Jason P. Clark
, a gay man who is chairman of the San Francisco
Republican Party.

Just don't look for Gallardo's name to be on the ballot.

"No, absolutely not," he said when asked if he
would seek public office.

Making fun of the U.S. Senate Democratic minority leader,
Gallardo added, "I am always behind the scenes. I have no desire to
compete with Chuck Schumer for camera
time."

Assembly candidate Judy Appel

Lesbian school leader joins East Bay Assembly race

Lesbian Berkeley school board member Judy Appel
has officially entered the race for the open 15th
Assembly District seat. The incumbent, Assemblyman Tony Thurmond
(D-Richmond), is running to be the state's
superintendent of public instruction after serving two two-year terms in the
Legislature.

"With your help, I'll represent our voices in
Sacramento with the same compassion and determination I've brought to
everything I've ever done. Together, we'll fight to strengthen our public
schools, reform our criminal justice system, and ensure fairness for working
Californians," wrote Appel, 52, in a July 11 email to supporters.
"We'll make sure that health care is a right, affordable housing is a
reality and paid leave is the norm."

The announcement about her campaign had been expected, as
Appel had told the B.A.R. in May she planned to run for the legislative seat.
The Assembly district includes the cities of Albany, Berkeley, El Cerrito, El
Sobrante, Emeryville, Hercules, Kensington, Piedmont, Pinole, Richmond, San
Pablo, Tara Hills, and a portion of Oakland.

Appel and her wife, Alison Bernstein
, live in Berkeley with their two children, Kobi
, a sophomore at Sarah Lawrence College, and Tris
, an incoming Berkeley High junior. Formerly the
executive director of Our Family Coalition, which advocates for LGBT families,
Appel is now executive director of the California School-Based Health Alliance.

She is the third out candidate to seek the Assembly seat.
Lesbian Richmond City Councilwoman Jovanka Beckles
was the first to enter the race this spring, while
last month bisexual East Bay Municipal Utility District board member Andy
Katz launched his second bid for the seat.
The Berkeley resident dropped out of the race in 2014 due to a lack of
financial support and endorsements from community groups and local leaders.

Should one of them win the seat, they would be the first
LGBT state legislator from the East Bay. Also running for the seat are two
straight candidates: Oakland City Councilman Dan Kalb
and former Obama campaign aide and White House
staffer Buffy Wicks, who lives
in Oakland.

Political Notes, the notebook's online companion, will return
Monday, July 31.